Cosmetic breast surgery may be done at an outpatient surgery clinic or in a hospital.

Most women receive general anesthesia for this surgery. You will be asleep and pain-free.

You may also have medicine to relax you and ocal anesthesia. You will be awake and will receive medicine to numb your breast area to block pain.

There are many different ways to place breast implants:

In the most common technique, the surgeon will make an incision (cut) on the underside of your breast, in the natural skin fold. Your surgeon will place the implant through this incision. Your scar may be a little more visible if you are younger, thin, and have not yet had children.

Another technique is to place the implant through an incision under your arm. Your surgeon may use an endoscope (a tool with a camera and surgical instruments at the end that is inserted through a vein) to do the surgery. There will be no scar around your breast, but you may have a visible scar on the underside of your arm.

In another technique, the surgeon makes a cut around the edge of your areola, the darkened area around your nipple. You may have more problems with breastfeeding and loss of sensation around your nipple with this method.

A newer technique involves placing the implant through an incision near your belly button. The surgeon tunnels an endoscope up to the breast area. A saline implant is placed and filled.

Breast implants may be placed either directly behind the breast tissue (subglandular) or behind the outer layer of chest wall muscles (submuscular). Placement of the implants and the kind of implants will affect:

A breast lift, or mastopexy, is usually done to lift sagging, loose breasts. The size of the areola, the dark pink skin surrounding the nipple, can also be reduced.

Talk with a plastic surgeon if you are considering cosmetic breast surgery. Discuss how you expect to look and feel better. Keep in mind the desired result is improvement, not perfection. Emotional stability is an important factor. Breast surgery can renew your self-confidence and improve your appearance, but the rest is up to you.

Small scars, usually in an area where they do not show much. Some women may have thickened, raised scars.

Uneven position of your nipples

Different size or shape of the two breasts

It is normal for your body to create a “capsule” made up of scar tissue around your new breast implant. This helps keep the implant in place. Sometimes, this capsule becomes thickened and larger and may cause a change in the shape of your breast, hardening of breast tissue, or some pain.

Breaking or leakage of the implant

Visible rippling of the implant

The emotional risks of surgery may include feeling that your breasts don't look perfect, or you may be disappointed with people's reactions to your “new” breasts.

You may need to stay overnight in the hospital. Some women can go home when their anesthesia wears off and they can walk, drink water, get to the bathroom safely, and have pain they can manage at home.

After breast augmentation surgery, a bulky gauze dressing will be wrapped around your breasts and chest, or you might wear a surgical bra. Drainage tubes may be attached to your breasts. These will be removed within 3 days.

Sometimes doctors also recommend massaging the breast starting 5 days after surgery to reduce hardening of the capsule that surrounds the implant. Ask your doctor first before massaging over your implants.

You are likely to have a very good outcome from breast surgery. You may feel better about your appearance and yourself. Also, the pain or skin symptoms you had (such as striation) will disappear. You may need to wear a special supportive bra for a few months to reshape your breasts.

Scars are permanent and are often more visible in the year after surgery. They will fade after this. Your surgeon will try to place the incisions so that your scars are as hidden as possible. Your scars should not be noticeable, even in low-cut clothing, since incisions are usually made on the underside of the breast.

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